“Hey G-Town Gal: If your parents have to pay for your birth control, maybe they should get a say in who you sleep with! Instant birth control!”

“If every Tweaton sent Georgetown Gal one condom, her parents wouldn’t have to cancel basic cable, & she would never reproduce — sound good?”

The controversy began when Limbaugh attacked Fluke on his show, calling her a “slut” and a “prostitute” for her advocacy of insurance coverage for birth control. Limbaugh has since issued a public apology.

Patricia Heaton returned to Twitter Monday with stating, “I apologized to Ms Fluke last week. I may not agree with her views but I didn’t treat her with respect and I’m sorry. I was wrong. Mea Culpa.”

Other Twitter users voiced their support of Fluke, criticizing Patricia Heaton. Twitter user Arwen Taylor posted a Martin Luther King, Jr. quote, directed the star, “Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.”

Heaton replied, “That’s a good quote – I don’t feel it applies to me!”

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I work for an organization that provides information to members on various topics. If we send a link to copyrighted web content (such as a page on the IBM web site) are we infringing on that content’s copyright? I’m pretty certain we aren’t — if you can point me towards relevant legal precedents, etc. that would be great.. Keep in mind that I’m already pretty certain that we can freely use the URLs. What I really need is legal documentation of that fact, to make our corporate attorney happy. Thanks!.